When I select a directory in PhpStorm and use View | Quick Documentation shortcut it shows No documentation found message:
I'm wondering if there is any way (like IDE settings or installing extra plugins) to create separate documentation for directories?
Related
When I create a web project in WebStorm, there is a directories option in Settings where I can set up my directory structure :
I am using IntelliJ Ultimate now, and apparently it is a superset of WebStorm, so I expect it to work exactly the same.
However after I create my web project, this "directories" option is missing.
How do I setup my directories for a web project in IntelliJ?
In IDEA, similar settings are available in the Project structure dialog (File | Project Structure, Ctrl+Alt+Shift+S in default keymap).
Unlike WebStorm, IDEA supports different kind of modules, facets, artifacts, its projects structure is much more complex, that's why a separate dialog is required to manage it
I'm trying to add a c/c++ plugin to IntelliJ IDEA, so I went to plugins and searched for it but couldn't find it.
Did they remove it and replace it with their new IDE cLion? Is it no longer supported or what?
Looks like the version of your IntelliJ IDEA is newer than what the C/C++ plugin supports. If you look at the plugin page you can see that builds from 139.1 until 142 are compatible. And if you look here you can see that build 141 is IntelliJ 14.1 and IntelliJ IDEA 15 is numbered 143. So my guess is you are using IntelliJ IDEA 15 or 16 EAP and therefore the plugin is not shown when you search for it.
Simply download the cpp plugin of the old 14 version located here:
https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/1373-c-c-
Then edit the file CppTools/META-INF/plugin.xml and replace the "until-build" value in line 5 to something like until-build="170.0"
And this works perfectly :)
One should really note that the "C/C++" plugin available in the IntelliJ Plugin Repository is actually not developed by Jetbrains, but by a third party called AdvancedTools, and has long not been updated. I'm not sure if that is related to the release of CLion, e.g. IntelliJ bought out the plugin to serve as the foundation of CLion or whatnot.
As listed in the CLion FAQ page, there is currently no official standalone plugin for C/C++ editing available for IntelliJ IDEA. Just as with some other products such as Jetbrains AppCode, Jetbrains are currently keeping CLion as an exclusively paid product, without a free community edition, as indicated in this forum post.
The post also confirmed that a plugin for IntelliJ IDEA might be coming in the future, but is currently (Jan 2018) not a priority for JetBrains.
So yeah for now the only way to get decent C/C++ support within the IntelliJ ecosystem is to use/buy JetBrains CLion.
Download latest version of c/c++ extension from link: https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/1373-c-c-
then open that CppTools.zip inside META-INF folder open file plugin.xml modify line five until-build="" from your own intellij idea build. Go to Help --> About in Your Intellij idea.
plugin.xml file screenshot:
Now Go to File --> Settings --> Plugins --> Install plugins from Disk, browse ypur edited/ modified CppTools.zip.
I faced this problem before and i figure out that the software i install it was old and not update, so try to see the plugin version and see is that plugin version compatible with your intellij-idea, if not check update for the intelli-idea ,the developers fix many problems in every update ,then download it.
you can check compatibility from this page.
Here
Click on Preferences -> Plugins -> Browse Repositories and search for it
I work on a Java based Play! project for severals months now and I'd like to import it completely in IntelliJ, meaning being able to run, compile, test and debug from IntelliJ, without the need to use the command line.
According to this post from Jetbrain, it seems to be possible, if I quote the article it says clearly : "Now you don’t need to switch between IntelliJ IDEA and Play console anymore. Everything is available right from your favorite IDE.", but I can't figure out a way to achieve this for now, even if I follow the tutorial provided by Jetbrains.
Here are the steps I've been throught :
Open my fav IDE IntelliJ ;)
Go to the project list window.
Import project
Import from external model and choose SBT as suggested in Jetbrains tutorial.
option "Use auto import" checked, option "create directories for empty content roots automatically" checked. Project SDK Java 1.7
Global sbt settings : JVM From project JDK.
Finish
By now, if I try to make the project and launch it from IntelliJ, I'll get scala compiling errors related to routes object. Thanks to this post, we can understand that this happens because scala routes are located to specific folders that needs to be included in IntelliJ sources settings for this project. So next step was :
File -> Project Structure -> Modules
Add target/scala-2.10/classes:target/scala-2.10/resources_managed:target/scala-2.10/src_managed as sources folders.
But my problem remains the same, routes object being unrecognized.
Notes : I have no scala facets in my project structure configuration nor can add one.
IntelliJ provides integrated support for the Play Framework for Scala and Java. Support is currently only available in IntelliJ Ultimate Edition (see the Frameworks and Technology section).
Assuming Ultimate Edition, the setup for Play is incredibly easy. Simply create a new project by importing build.sbt, then choose Add Framework Support and choose Play 2.
Once complete, you can start and stop Play using the Play 2 Run/Debug configuration. No command line necessary.
Here is a more in depth look at IntelliJ's Play project configuration.
You could try the command play idea if you are using play or activator idea if you are using activator. That will do the magic.
I am new to both IntelliJ and the Play framework. I noticed that after installing IntelliJ and importing my first Play application, syntax highlighting is not working properly for both *.scala.html files and the routes files. I was able to modify the settings for the *.scala.html files to have them recognized as Scala files, but this isn't actually correct because the scala templating system is not pure Scala.
Here's a screenshot, in case it helps:
In the official Play video tutorials there seems to be a special syntax highlighting setting for these template files, but I don't know how to add this to IntelliJ. Here's a screenshot from this tutorial and how I would like the syntax highlighting to look:
Also, I couldn't find any solution for the routes file. Any help would be most appreciated!"
P.S. I enabled the Vim emulator during installation of IntelliJ. I don't know if this had any effect on the syntax highlighting defaults...
Playframework full support in only available in IntelliJ ultimate edition a commercial one.
Community edition (free version) that you probably are using doesn't have any support for playframework it only supports Scala (language).
Routes and *.scala.html files are part of the framework not the language.
You may like to purchase IntelliJ ultimate edition or would like to go for Scala IDE (based on eclipse) which is an open source IDE for java and scala, it seems to have full support for play 2.x.
For *scala.html syntax highlighting
Preferences > Plugins > Install Jetbrains plugin...
Then install the Scala plugin
Restart IntelliJ and syntax highlighting should work.
For routing file highlighting
Preferences > Editor > File Types
Under the registered patterns for HTML Routing Support For Play 2 Framework if *.routes isn't already there, add it. Or add however you plan on naming your routes files.
One feature I miss from Eclipse is exporting a list of installed plugins; I haven't been able to find a way to do this in IntelliJ.
For developers who need to use different machines (including different OSs) this would be helpful. Other than the availables.xml and disabled_plugins.txt is there any other way to get a list of what plugins are installed and active? Having to use two files to deduce the answers is a bit cumbersome.
Open the settings, go to plugins, filter them by "Enabled", then select the entire list (CTRL+A would work), and copy them with CTRL+C.
This will give you a nice list of enabled plugins along with their versions. Something like:
BashSupport (1.6.13.182)
Behat Support (182.4129.45)
Blade Support (182.4129.45)
Codeception Framework (182.4129.45)
CoffeeScript (182.4129.45)
Command Line Tool Support (182.4129.45)
[...]
There is no easier way to do it right now, please vote for this feature request.
I think there is plugin now here:
Intellij plugin export
You can download and install that, after restart IDEA, you can see the option under File -> Export Plugins...
i find intellij plugin in this directory (windows 7):
C:\Users\{USER_NAME}\.IntelliJIdea{IDEA_VERSION}\config\plugins